r/sbubby peaks Tuesdays 4pm-6pm UTC
Image-based absurdism dominates r/sbubby, with Photoshop edits featuring surreal mashups of pop culture elements consistently performing strongest. The subreddit thrives on what members call "sbubbymaking" - a specific style of intentionally chaotic image manipulation where creators combine unrelated elements like Family Guy screenshots with Japanese text edits, alcoholic beverage packaging redesigns ("Tasty beer" being a prime example), or bizarre food product parodies ("RAD SHADOWRANS baked snack crackers"). Text posts work when they follow the community's signature nonsense formula, such as "GIRLS ARE STINKY POOS! I DON'T THINK GIRLS ARE STINKY POOS! YEAH!" which mirrors the subreddit's love for contradictory, childlike declarations. Link posts rarely succeed unless they're absurdist content from niche corners of the internet that match the community's specific brand of surreal humor. The most successful content types involve deliberate low-effort aesthetics that paradoxically required significant work, as evidenced by posts like "This is what happens when you get bored and decide to model everything from scratch to make the ultimate shitpost" which explicitly brags about meticulous editing while maintaining a deliberately janky presentation.
The voice here must be aggressively casual to the point of intentional illiteracy, embracing misspellings, random capitalization, and nonsensical phrasing as core stylistic elements. Successful posts adopt a childlike, almost stream-of-consciousness delivery reminiscent of early internet culture, where phrases like "STAY НОMI" (using Cyrillic characters) or "QUARANTEEN The Night НеStayed Home!" demonstrate the expectation for creative character misuse. Humor operates at maximum absurdity with zero self-awareness - the more illogical the connection between elements, the better. Jargon expectations include mastery of specific community lingo like "sbubbymaking" and recognition of recurring inside jokes such as the "spicy zimger stanker" reference. Formal structure is anathema; posts should feel hastily thrown together despite often requiring significant editing effort, maintaining the illusion of spontaneous nonsense that characterizes the community's aesthetic as seen in posts like "You can't cough on the boogeyman" which pairs a mundane statement with an utterly disconnected visual concept.
Highly upvoted posts demonstrate precise understanding of the subreddit's unique absurdism formula, particularly those that remix recognizable templates with completely unexpected elements. Posts that successfully blend multiple layers of nonsense - such as combining pop culture references (Family Guy), fabricated product packaging, and deliberately mistranslated foreign text - consistently outperform simpler jokes. The community rewards effort disguised as laziness, where complex Photoshop work appears deceptively simple, as highlighted in the post "Before you ask, yes, I even edited the Japanese" which brags about meticulous attention to detail while maintaining the subreddit's signature low-effort facade. Posts featuring recurring community tropes like "The Shit
r/sbubby was created on November 21, 2016, making it 9 years and 6 months old and a well-established subreddit. With 644,625 members, this is a mid-size community that has built a substantial following and typically sees consistent daily activity.
r/sbubby is slowly growing, with 422 new members in the last 30 days.
r/sbubby shows typical engagement for a community of this scale, with an average of 52.6 upvotes per post across its 644,625 members. The community is highly discussion-oriented, with a comment-to-upvote ratio of 0.57. To reach the Hot section of r/sbubby, posts typically need at least 6 upvotes, reflecting the community's activity level.
Posts on r/sbubby receive an average of 30.2 comments, indicating a highly engaged community where members actively participate in conversations rather than passively consuming content. This level of discussion is characteristic of communities that value dialogue and diverse perspectives.
Based on an analysis of 22 top posts from the past week, Tuesday is the most active day with 6 posts reaching the top, while Thursday sees the least activity with 1 posts. Weekday activity is higher than weekends, suggesting a more professionally-oriented community.
The peak posting hours are around 4pm UTC (5 posts), 9pm UTC (3 posts), and 8pm UTC (3 posts). The quietest hours are 6am UTC, 12am UTC, and 10pm UTC, with only 1-1 posts each reaching the top during these times.
Weekly breakdown: Monday (2), Tuesday (6), Wednesday (5), Thursday (1), Friday (3), Saturday (3), Sunday (2) posts reaching the top.
r/sbubby currently has 644,625 subscribers. Over the past 30 days, the community has grown by 422 members (0.07%), averaging 14 new subscribers per day. This growth rate places r/sbubby in the top 55% of all tracked subreddits.
Over the past 90 days, r/sbubby has gained 1,476 subscribers (0.23%). Since tracking began 647 days ago, the community has added -8,462 total subscribers. Growth has been accelerating recently compared to the longer-term trend.
r/sbubby is slowly growing, with 422 new members in the last 30 days.
r/sbubby has 644,625 subscribers as of May 2026.
The best time to post on r/sbubby is Tuesdays 4pm-6pm UTC, based on analysis of top-performing posts from the past week.
r/sbubby is slowly growing, with 422 new members in the last 30 days.
r/sbubby was created on November 21, 2016, making it 9 years old.
Posts on r/sbubby typically need at least 6 upvotes to reach the Hot section.
r/sbubby is a Reddit community with 644,625 subscribers. The community describes itself as: "Logos edited cleanly to seem like the original but read as something else." The best time to post on r/sbubby is Tuesdays 4pm-6pm UTC. Posts receive an average of 52.6 upvotes and 30.2 comments. The minimum upvotes needed to reach the Hot section is approximately 6. The subreddit is adding approximately 14 new members each day. Founded 9 years ago, r/sbubby is tracked and analyzed by RedditList as part of its comprehensive database of over 106,355 subreddits.
Last updated: 2026-05-20 22:20:19